Linux seems to be viewed in various places (err . . . LC HQ as well . . . ?) as a sort of
naughty little brother, to be tolerated but not given much credence.

In the light of both Windows and Macintosh making things increasingly difficult
(as well as screwing developers out of money for the 'honour' of being able to run programs on their platforms)
to get programs up-and-running, Linux may, at last, come into its own as
a desktop system (family).

I have just installed LXLE 32-bit on a 9 year old laptop that had a hiatus with Haiku OS:

[dumped Haiku OS after a 'bash' on a 32-bit INTEL 2006 iMac and the 686 COMPAQ
laptop because neither would boot properly:
randomly booting from an external boot disc, from the home disc, or half-booting.]

Now LiveCode 9.5.0 installed on LXLE without a backward glace, and functions just superbly as far
as I can tell from 30 minutes "spin in the wind."

BUT this:
-

-
seems odd.

Nothing serious as such; but things might go that way if one starts attaching substacks to part of the IDE.

Last edited by richmond62 on Fri Sep 13, 2019 12:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.

In "my case" (i.e. LC 9.5.0 + LXLE Linux = the latest 'thang'), this proves
that LiveCode really are a bit slapdash when it comes to their Linux offerings.

LiveCode on LXLE is community-supported. Perhaps you'd meant to write "...we devs who use this distro really are a bit slapdash..."

"Linux" is not an operating system. It is a kernel, from which others add a vast variety of packages to build complete operating systems, or "distributions" ("distros").

Given the hundreds of distros out there, I know of know company that claims to support them all (enjoying Hannah Montana Linux? <g>). Like most, LiveCode has committed to official support for the most popular distros.

They've also made the source code and yours truly available to help any community members who want to expand LC to run on a broader mix of Linux packages that comprise other distros.

If you're interested, I would welcome a discussion on what might be needed for you to steward a community project to make LC on LXLE run to your satisfaction.

Richard Gaskin
Community volunteer LiveCode Community LiaisonLiveCode development, training, and consulting services: Fourth World Systems:http://FourthWorld.comLiveCode User Group on Facebook :http://FaceBook.com/groups/LiveCodeUsers/

Gosh, really, I didn't know that . . . maybe, just maybe, I don't want to be a complete pill like "you-know-who"
and rabbit on about "GNU-Linux" and so on, just as people tend not to talk about "Microsoft Windows" or
"Apple Macintosh" (well, pimply herberts do in England, I've noticed).
-

You-Know-Who.

Smallman.jpg (10.52 KiB) Viewed 182 times

-

Pimply Herberts

herbert.jpg (10.6 KiB) Viewed 182 times

Last edited by richmond62 on Fri Sep 13, 2019 4:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.

If you're interested, I would welcome a discussion on what might be needed for you to steward a community project to make LC on LXLE run to your satisfaction.

No, I'm not, as LiveCode IS running very well on LXLE,
as you might work out if you read my posting rather more carefully rather than
had a knee-jerk reaction to one small "crit."

What I AM SUGGESTINGis that LiveCode
"might like to consider" a spot more testing on the Linux side of the universe
as there is a possibility given Macintosh's and Windows' increasing restrictions
that desktop Linux may increase its "market" share . . .

That is a most interesting statement, as I could, for the sake or argument,
pay for a commercial version of LiveCode and install it on LXLE. At which
point I could, quite legitimately, expect some sort of direct support from
the company from which I had purchased it.

I have not seen any labels on any form of LiveCode such as those on cigarette
packets warning me that running LiveCode on LXLE might be "bad for my health."

the "substack of" thing is, I think, also related to the fact that the Project Browser pops up with the same stack selected. I'm not sure what's going on... it doesn't seem to have to do with stack mode. I'm guessing it's just the last stack selected. And here the "selected" refers to the last plugin stack the IDE touched as it was loading the plugins.

That actually makes a lot of sense, I often see similar things referring to that script colorizor plugin thingie I put -hh's excellent information into. I wonder how that kid ever made out, I don't seem to see him around the forums much these days.

That is a most interesting statement, as I could, for the sake or argument,
pay for a commercial version of LiveCode and install it on LXLE. At which
point I could, quite legitimately, expect some sort of direct support from
the company from which I had purchased it.

You are free to invent any personal expectations you find satisfying, but the expectations of the engine maintainers are described in the Release Notes that accompany each version.

Richard Gaskin
Community volunteer LiveCode Community LiaisonLiveCode development, training, and consulting services: Fourth World Systems:http://FourthWorld.comLiveCode User Group on Facebook :http://FaceBook.com/groups/LiveCodeUsers/